Butler Alexandra E, Janson Juliette, Soeller Walter C, Butler Peter C
Division of Endocrinology and Diabetes, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California 90033, USA.
Diabetes. 2003 Sep;52(9):2304-14. doi: 10.2337/diabetes.52.9.2304.
Nondiabetic obese humans adapt to insulin resistance by increasing beta-cell mass. In contrast, obese humans with type 2 diabetes have an approximately 60% deficit in beta-cell mass. Recent studies in rodents reveal that beta-cell mass is regulated, increasing in response to insulin resistance through increased beta-cell supply (islet neogenesis and beta-cell replication) and/or decreased beta-cell loss (beta-cell apoptosis). Prospective studies of islet turnover are not possible in humans. In an attempt to establish the mechanism for the deficit in beta-cell mass in type 2 diabetes, we used an obese versus lean murine transgenic model for human islet amyloid polypeptide (IAPP) that develops islet pathology comparable to that in humans with type 2 diabetes. By 40 weeks of age, obese nontransgenic mice did not develop diabetes and adapted to insulin resistance by a 9-fold increase (P < 0.001) in beta-cell mass accomplished by a 1.7-fold increase in islet neogenesis (P < 0.05) and a 5-fold increase in beta-cell replication per islet (P < 0.001). Obese transgenic mice developed midlife diabetes with islet amyloid and an 80% (P < 0.001) deficit in beta-cell mass that was due to failure to adaptively increase beta-cell mass. The mechanism subserving this failed expansion was a 10-fold increase in beta-cell apoptosis (P < 0.001). There was no relationship between the extent of islet amyloid or the blood glucose concentration and the frequency of beta-cell apoptosis. However, the frequency of beta-cell apoptosis was related to the rate of increase of islet amyloid. These prospective studies suggest that the formation of islet amyloid rather than the islet amyloid per se is related to increased beta-cell apoptosis in this murine model of type 2 diabetes. This finding is consistent with the hypothesis that soluble IAPP oligomers but not islet amyloid are responsible for increased beta-cell apoptosis. The current studies also support the concept that replicating beta-cells are more vulnerable to apoptosis, possibly accounting for the failure of beta-cell mass to expand appropriately in response to obesity in type 2 diabetes.
非糖尿病肥胖人群通过增加β细胞量来适应胰岛素抵抗。相比之下,患有2型糖尿病的肥胖人群β细胞量大约减少60%。最近对啮齿动物的研究表明,β细胞量受到调节,通过增加β细胞供应(胰岛新生和β细胞复制)和/或减少β细胞丢失(β细胞凋亡)来响应胰岛素抵抗从而增加。在人类中进行胰岛更新的前瞻性研究是不可能的。为了试图确定2型糖尿病中β细胞量减少的机制,我们使用了一种肥胖与瘦的人类胰岛淀粉样多肽(IAPP)小鼠转基因模型,该模型会出现与2型糖尿病患者相当的胰岛病理变化。到40周龄时,肥胖非转基因小鼠未患糖尿病,通过胰岛新生增加1.7倍(P<0.05)和每个胰岛β细胞复制增加5倍(P<0.001),使β细胞量增加9倍(P<0.001)来适应胰岛素抵抗。肥胖转基因小鼠在中年时出现糖尿病并伴有胰岛淀粉样变,β细胞量减少80%(P<0.001),这是由于未能适应性地增加β细胞量。这种未能扩张的机制是β细胞凋亡增加10倍(P<0.001)。胰岛淀粉样变的程度或血糖浓度与β细胞凋亡频率之间没有关系。然而,β细胞凋亡频率与胰岛淀粉样变的增加速率有关。这些前瞻性研究表明,在这种2型糖尿病小鼠模型中,胰岛淀粉样变的形成而非胰岛淀粉样变本身与β细胞凋亡增加有关。这一发现与可溶性IAPP寡聚体而非胰岛淀粉样变导致β细胞凋亡增加的假说一致。目前的研究还支持这样一种观点,即正在复制的β细胞更容易发生凋亡,这可能解释了2型糖尿病中β细胞量未能随肥胖而适当扩张的原因。